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Greluna Exchange (greluna.com) Security Report & Trust Score

Offline Last scanned: March 21, 2026
25 /100 Elevated Risk

Category Crypto

GRELUNA is a cryptocurrency exchange platform that offers digital asset trading including spot trading, futures contracts, options, staking, and ICO participation with various cryptocurrency pairs.

About Greluna Exchange

Greluna Exchange is a website categorized as Crypto. GRELUNA is a cryptocurrency exchange platform that offers digital asset trading including spot trading, futures contracts, options, staking, and ICO participation with various cryptocurrency pairs. It was last analyzed on March 21, 2026 and currently scores 25/100, which we rate as Elevated Risk.

The domain was registered 7y 6m ago. It is registered through Gname.com Pte. Ltd.. The registration is set to expire on August 30, 2027. WHOIS privacy protection is not enabled. The domain is not signed with DNSSEC.

The site is hosted by AS13335 Cloudflare, Inc. in San Francisco, United States. The server runs cloudflare. It resolves to the IP address 188.114.97.3.

We found no active warnings for this domain: no engine detections, no regulator alerts and no blocklist entries at the time of the last scan.

With a trust score of 25/100, Greluna Exchange sits in an elevated-risk band. Several of the signals we track resemble patterns observed on problematic websites. Proceed with caution and verify the operator through independent sources before sharing money or data.

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Is Greluna Exchange safe to use?

Based on our last scan on March 21, 2026, Greluna Exchange (greluna.com) has a trust score of 25/100, which we rate as Elevated Risk. Several signals resemble patterns observed on problematic websites, so proceed with caution.

We found no official regulator warning on record for Greluna Exchange at the time of the last scan. Keep in mind that the absence of a warning is not proof of legitimacy: fraudulent platforms often operate for months before authorities list them. A legitimate investment service is normally registered with a recognized financial authority, such as the SEC, CFTC, FCA, ASIC or the regulator in your country, and that registration can be verified directly on the authority's own website. If a platform claims a license you cannot confirm at the source, treat that claim as false.

greluna.com has been registered for 7y 6m, which is generally a reassuring signal: most disposable scam domains never reach that age. Age alone, however, proves nothing about who operates the website today.

Our infrastructure analysis links greluna.com to a network of 7 related domains sharing the same technical fingerprints. Domain clusters like this are frequently operated by scam networks that rotate addresses to stay ahead of blacklists. Review the related domains listed on this page before trusting this website.

How online scams like this operate

Most modern investment fraud does not start on the fraudulent website itself: it starts with a person. Operators build a fake relationship through social media, dating apps, messaging groups or an unsolicited message, sometimes over weeks or months, before casually introducing an "exclusive" investment opportunity. This long-grooming approach is widely known as pig butchering: the victim is patiently "fattened" with trust before the financial harvest begins.

The victim is then directed to a professional-looking platform. The dashboard, balances and trading charts shown there are fabricated and fully controlled by the operators. Small early withdrawals are sometimes honored on purpose to build confidence and encourage a much larger deposit. When the victim finally asks to withdraw a significant amount, the tone changes: sudden "taxes", "release fees" or "verification charges" appear, and the account is frozen until they are paid. Every additional payment simply disappears.

A related tactic is the clone firm: scammers impersonate a genuinely licensed company, copying its name, logo and registration number while operating from a slightly different domain. This is why a license claim should always be verified on the regulator's own website, and why the exact domain name matters as much as the brand it displays.

Warning signs to watch for

  • Unsolicited contact: a stranger, "advisor" or online acquaintance steering you toward a specific platform.
  • Guaranteed returns: promises of fixed or unusually high profits with little or no risk.
  • Pressure to act quickly: expiring bonuses, "last remaining spots", or warnings that the opportunity closes today.
  • Unusual payment methods: requests to pay in cryptocurrency, gift cards, or by transfer to a personal account.
  • Unverifiable license: a regulatory license that cannot be confirmed on the regulator's own register, or no license at all.
  • Withdrawal problems: surprise "taxes", "release fees" or endless verification steps before you can access your own money.
  • Only-up profits: a dashboard whose balance rises regardless of market conditions.

What to do if you already sent money

  1. Stop all communication: cut off the platform and whoever introduced you to it. Every additional contact is an opportunity for them to extract more money, including through fake "account managers" offering to fix the problem.
  2. Never pay a release fee: do not hand over a "tax" or "unlock charge" to recover a withdrawal. Legitimate services deduct fees from the balance; only scams demand extra money upfront.
  3. Alert your bank immediately: contact your bank or card issuer at once. Chargebacks and wire recalls are time-sensitive, so the sooner you report, the better your chances.
  4. Preserve the evidence: save screenshots of the platform and conversations, emails, transaction references and any wallet addresses you paid to.
  5. Report the fraud: notify your national cybercrime or consumer-protection authority, and the financial regulator in your country.
  6. Beware recovery scams: be wary of "fund recovery" agents who contact you afterwards and guarantee to get your money back for an upfront fee. Victim lists are resold, and recovery fraud is often the second act of the same scam.

Identity

WHOIS

RegistrarGGname.com Pte. Ltd. (IANA #1923)
CreatedAugust 30, 2018
UpdatedJanuary 14, 2026
ExpiresAugust 30, 2027
Domain age7y 6m
DNSSECNot signed
Privacy protectionNo
Nameservers
  • luke.ns.cloudflare.com
  • naomi.ns.cloudflare.com
Status
  • client transfer prohibited

SSL

CertificateValid
IssuerGoogle Trust Services
Subjectgreluna.com
Valid fromMarch 14, 2026
Valid untilJune 12, 2026
Expires inExpired 33 days ago
ProtocolTLSv1.3
CipherTLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384
SAN
  • greluna.com
  • *.greluna.com

Server

IP address188.114.97.3
IPv6
ASNAS13335
ProviderAS13335 Cloudflare, Inc.
CountryUnited States (US)
CitySan Francisco
Server softwarecloudflare

Screenshot

Screenshot of greluna.com captured at the last scan
Captured at last scan

Forensics

Page timing

DNS lookup 0 ms
TCP connection 0 ms
TLS handshake 0 ms
Time to first byte 0 ms
Content download 1 ms
DOM content loaded 104 ms
Load complete 27,752 ms

Redirect chain

2
  1. https://web.greluna.com/
  2. https://web.greluna.com/

Network & resources

Total requests 75
Unique domains 2
Total size 18.1 MB
HTTPS 100.0%

Technologies

3
  • Vue.js js-framework
  • Cloudflare cdn
  • Tailwind CSS css-framework

Uptime

Last 30 days

0.0% uptime · 6,142 ms avg response